Major Alfred M. Hobby
Major Alfred M. Hobby had never faced an ultimatum before. In fact, he had never faced any real threats
until now. The Union naval commander, Lieutenant
John L. Kittredge, came ashore under a flag of truce and told him he was coming
ashore to inspect U.S. facilities. In blunt fashion, Hobby told Kittredge that
there were no U.S. facilities and he would resist any attacks on Corpus
Christi. Kittredge gave him forty eight
hours to evacuate the city.
A merchant from the town of St. Mary's of Aransas, Texas, Alfred Hobby
was an ardent supporter of states' rights and had served in the Texas House of
Representatives before the war. To
promote the Southern cause in St. Mary's, he established a chapter of the Knights
of the Golden Cross; a secret organization that promoted the expansion of
slavery. On May 18, 1862, he organized
the 8th Texas Infantry regiment to serve the Confederacy.
A self-righteous martinet, Lt. Kittredge ran a taught ship
bordering on the maniacal. Crew members were subjected to severe punishment for
the slightest of infractions. Falling
asleep during a worship service could subject you to "tricing" or
stretching. The violator was tied by the
wrists to the ship's rigging for thirty minutes. Any longer and your arms would probably be dislocated
or worse. Kittredge was not above
striking his crew to enforce discipline.
It was little wonder that most of the infractions on his ship involved drinking. On a ship like that, who wouldn't take to
drink!
For several months, Kittredge
and his one hundred man crew rounded up blockade runners and raided coastal
towns with his sailing bark, the U.S.S. Arthur. To make matters worse, he was
converting some of his captured vessels into gunboats for his own growing
flotilla. Now he had the muscle to
bombard and launch direct assaults on major Texas ports. Two of his vessels,
the Sachem and Corypheus, had light draft hulls to navigate shallow harbors. The Texas port of Corpus Christi was to be
his prime target.
Unlike other Texas regiments, the 8th Texas Infantry had
never served outside of Texas. They garrisoned
the Texas coast to ward off any Union invasion attempts. However, fighting
Union infantry and cavalry was one thing, fighting a navy was another. There were only five cannons available in Corpus to match Kittredge's
gunboats. None of his men had any
experience with targeting and firing artillery.
Fortunately, help came from two locals: a German immigrant Felix A.
Blucher, a nephew of the famed Prussian general, and Private Billy Mann, a
Confederate soldier on sick leave.
Hobby's men received invaluable instruction from the two. During the evening, the cannons were moved up
to the harbor and placed within earthworks dug during the War with Mexico. Kittredge was about to get a rude wake up
call.
On August, 1862, Hobby's men opened fire on the Sachem and Corypheus from four hundred yards.
With their hulls being breeched from the Texans' fire, Kittredge was
forced to fall back. In a daring move, Kittredge sent a detachment of thirty sailors
ashore to flank and capture Hobby's guns.
Hobby led a cavalry charge of twenty five men and forced them to depart
back to their ships. After picking up
his crew members, Kittredge began shelling Corpus Christi; six hundred shells
rained down on the city before Kittredge gave up and sailed away from the
harbor. One Unionist resident, John Dix,
tried to wave a Union flag from the roof of his house as if to signal the city's
surrender. Dix's daughter in law pointed
a shotgun to his head before he could get off his signal. His son fought in the
Confederate Army.
Returning residents found a number of spent shells in their
damaged homes. Calling them "Kittredges,"
they used them as doorstops. One curious
find, according to local legend, was the presence of whiskey inside some of the
spent shells. Apparently, Kittredge's rambunctious
crew had taken out the gunpowder and hid their forbidden whiskey inside the
shells.
Corpus Christi was secure for now. Kittredge's career wasn't. He was later captured during a foraging
expedition at Flour Bluff by Texas troops under Hobby. Given parole, he was sent north in
humiliation and given a new command.
After belting a crewmember in the mouth with his
pistol, Lt. Kittredge was court martialed out of the service.
1 comment:
There are some errors here. For example, the George Hughes that Kittredge struck was not the African American George Hughes. There were two George Hughes on the Wamsutta. Kittredge had intended to punish the African American Hughes but his orders became confused and he ended up striking the other man for his refusing to go to the masthead as punishment. This information is all in Kittredge's court martial record.
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